📚 grammar pathway 68664379c91bb

← Grammar Learning Center>Reported Commands and Requests: Pathway Review

🎯 Pathway Complete!

Congratulations on completing this grammar learning journey!

Your Learning Journey

Congratulations on completing this pathway! You've mastered converting direct commands and requests into reported speech, from basic instructions to professional contexts.

Key Grammar Points Review

• Basic structure: tell/ask + person + to infinitive
• Negative commands: tell/ask + person + not to + infinitive
• Professional context adaptations
• Hierarchy-appropriate reporting

Examples

Direct: 'Submit the report by Friday.' → Reported: The manager told me to submit the report by Friday.Shows basic command reporting in professional context
Direct: 'Could you please review this draft?' → Reported: She asked me to review the draft.Demonstrates polite request conversion
Direct: 'Don't share this information.' → Reported: The supervisor told us not to share the information.Shows negative command reporting
Direct: 'Would you mind helping with the presentation?' → Reported: My colleague asked me to help with the presentation.Shows formal request conversion

Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Incorrect: He told me don't go there

✅ Correct: He told me not to go there

Explanation: Use 'not to' instead of 'don't' in reported commands

❌ Incorrect: She asked to me to help

✅ Correct: She asked me to help

Explanation: Don't use 'to' twice – correct pattern is 'ask someone to do'

Tips for Success

  • Remember to change pronouns appropriately when reporting
  • Use 'tell' for commands and 'ask' for requests and questions
  • Maintain appropriate formality level in professional contexts

🏆 What You Accomplished

Mastered reporting commands and requests across different contexts and formality levels

🎯 Key Takeaways

  • Command and request reporting structure
  • Professional context adaptation
  • Formal instruction reporting
  • Hierarchy-appropriate communication

🚀 Next Steps

  • Practice with more complex reported speech patterns
  • Explore reported speech with time and tense changes
  • Study advanced formal business communication

🎉 Congratulations!

You’ve successfully completed this grammar pathway. Your English skills are improving with each lesson!